Call  for  Proposals  for  a  session  to  be  held  at  the  Annual  Conference  of  the  Royal   Geographical  Society,  London,  26  to  29  August  2014     Geographies  of  making:  the  jazz  of  participatory  fabrication,  improvisation  and   hackerspaces     The  Industrial  Revolution  of  the  nineteenth  century  introduced  the  world  to  mass   production  and  to  Fordist  production  flows.  In  the  late  twentieth  century,  phenomena   such  as  jet  travel,  the  internet,  and  outsourcing  prompted  some  pundits  (eg,  Friedman,   2005)  to  propose  metaphors  of  a  flattened  world,  with  concomitant  implications  on   space,  geography  and  the  (supposed)  death  of  distance.     As  our  present  century  unfolds,  technologies  and  socio-­‐cultural  phenomena  such  as  the   internet  of  things,  crowd-­‐sourcing,  digital  fabrication,  and  wearable  computing  are  not   only  democratizing  the  potentialities  of  participatory  design,  prototyping  and   production,  but  are  also  becoming  increasingly  enmeshed  with  –  and  breathing  new  life   into  –  ways  of  making  more  associated  with  cottage  industries  than  with  how   production  has  been  studied  and  understood  for  at  least  the  past  hundred  years.     As  circuits  mashup  with  woodcraft  and  beadwork,  as  the  clothes  we  wear  identify   themselves  with  their  own  unique  digital  signatures,  and  as  interest-­‐groups  carve  out   fabricative  spaces  of  their  own  across  major  urban  centres  worldwide,  what  might  the   implications  to  all  we  have  studied  and  known  about  the  geographies  of   industrialization,  of  industrial  location,  of  urbanization,  of  regional  divides  be?  What   might  some  of  the  narratives  be  behind  the  emergence  of  maker  cultures  and   hackerspaces  in  urban  areas  from  Washington  DC  to  Hong  Kong?     This  session  proposes  to  tell  some  of  these  stories,  and  to  start  conversations  around   such  implications.  Papers  and  works-­‐in-­‐progress  are  invited,  around  topics  and  themes   such  as  the  following:   -­‐ emerging  geographies  of  maker  culture  and  /  or  hackerspaces   -­‐ personal  fabrication,  participatory  fabrication,  digital  fabrication  and  /  or  3D   printing   -­‐ the  implications  of  open-­‐source  hardware,  such  as  Arduino  and  Raspberry  Pi,  on   existing  geographical  flows  of  design  and  production   -­‐ recasting  regional  divides  and  inequalities  with  respect  to  the  potential   democratizing  pertubations  of  participatory  fabrication   -­‐ craft,  woodwork,  weaving  and  apprenticeships  in  the  early  twenty-­‐first  century       Session  organizer:     Name:  Kenneth  Y  T  Lim   Affiliation:  Office  of  Education  Research,  National  Institute  of  Education,  Singapore   Email  address:  [email protected]       Presenters  are  kindly  invited  to  submit  their  proposals  to  the  session  organizer  by  the   20th  of  January  2014.  Proposals  should  minimally  comprise  the  title  of  the  paper,  an   abstract  (of  up  to  150  words),  and  full  contact  details.  

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As circuits mashup with woodcraft and beadwork, as the clothes we wear identify themselves with their own unique digital signatures, and as interest-‐groups ...

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